First, a correction: When I wrote about the tragedy in Gush Etzion the other day, I accidentally wrote “Gush Katif,” which no longer exists. Thanks to those readers who caught this. Truth is, I have never forgotten Gush Katif (nor should any of us) and occasionally I slip and write about this Gush [“block,” as in a block of communities] rather than the one I intended.

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As to the situation possibly getting better…

We haven’t had any murders of Jews at the hands of Arab terrorists for about 72 hours now, after several terrorist attacks in a row. Does this means things are better?

Minimally so, perhaps. The news reports yesterday were offering hints from military/police personnel about a slowly improving situation. The improvement, we were told, was because of stringent measures that had been set in place: 2,000 more troops had been moved to problem areas in the field and were more visible, arrests were taking place.

Authorities – including Police Commissioner Inspector General Yochanan Danino – were saying that since 1,000 border police reinforcements had been brought into Jerusalem, the improvement in the security situation could already be seen. The reinforcements will stay in place as long as it is deemed necessary.

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With regard to the last 72 hours, the fact that there were no murders does not mean that the Arabs have stopped trying to kill us. In point of fact, there were two planned attacks that were foiled last night.

In one instance, a young Palestinian Arab from Ramallah, was hitchhiking at a junction outside of Dolev in Samaria, seeking a ride to Jerusalem. An Israeli stopped and asked him where he was going: the Arab’s accent and halting response made him suspicious. He drove off, and then contacted authorities. Police came from Modi’in Ilit, searched his bag and found a large knife and screwdriver. After questioning, the Arab admitted he had intended to go to Jerusalem to stab a bus driver. He was hoping the driver would lose control and the bus would turn over, causing other casualties as well.

Please understand that when I refer to a knife, I do not mean a small paring knife for peeling an apple. Below you see the weapons this guy carried;

Credit: Police Spokesman Unit

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The second Palestinian Arab who intended to attack was caught while walking outside of the Machpela (the Cave of the Patriarchs) in Hevron. Security personnel thought he was walking “suspiciously.” This is important, as it means there was vigilance. Security personnel asked him to lift up his shirt while he was still a few feet away, and saw a commando knife at his waist. When the police cocked their guns at him, he threw the knife down; he was arrested.

Apparently Palestinian Arabs have shifted from driving vehicles into crowds to stabbing with knives as the preferred method of attack. Hey, not everyone has a car, but anyone can get a knife.

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Of course, throwing of stones never goes out of favor as a means of attacking. This particular incident made me quite furious:

Yesterday, a group of 10 and 11 year old girls from Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu (a religious kibbutz in the Beit Shean valley near Lake Kinneret) was taken by teachers on a hike to the Arbel Cliffs, overlooking the lake. A group of 16 and 17 year old boys from Kfar Manda (an Arab town in the lower Galil) began pelting them with a barrage of rocks, injuring some of the teachers and some of the students. One teacher required hospitalization. And all of the girls were traumatized.

Police were summoned, but the information I have about what happened subsequently is insufficient. I only know that the boys’ “guide” was taken in for questioning, at which point he “apologized.” And that an investigation has been launched.

Please understand, we are not talking about Arabs in Israel illegally. These boys are Israeli citizens. Why were they not arrested on the spot? Had the guide tried to stop them (tend to doubt this), or did he simply “apologize” after the fact? Were there no other adults with the boys?

There must be enormous stringency in dealing with such cases.

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That matter of stringency is a point that is being made over and over by commentators looking at the violence. What has happened is that security forces – police, soldiers – have lost deterrence power: the Arabs who wish to initiate attacks are no longer afraid.

And there is one factor, connected to this, that is particularly worrisome: There are youthful elements within the Palestinian Arabs community that apparently express “admiration” for ISIS: Members of ISIS are seen as brave and fearless, and they may feel empowered by them.

I had no sooner encountered an analyst who wrote of this, then I also encountered this report:

An Arab boy in Jerusalem was stopped and searched because he looked suspicious. A large knife was found on him (again, a knife) and he was arrested.

”During the arrest, the boy threatened the police saying, ‘ISIS and Hamas will take care of you.’” (Emphasis added)

With regard to lack of fear of police, I want to circle back to look at an incident of almost a week ago: Last Friday night, in the Galil Arab town of Kfar Kanna, a young Israeli Arab named Kheir al-Din Hamdan had an altercation with police that ended with his death. There have been conflicting stories involving a stun grenade. Apparently police came to arrest him, or an associate of his, for throwing such a grenade. At some point he came after the car where the police sat, with a knife in hand. and banged with it on the car window – after which it seems he opened the rear door of the car.

The police report said they fired a warning shot at him first, and then shot him only when he did not respond to the warning and they felt themselves threatened. A video of the event, however, suggests that there was no warning shot and that the police erred badly.

The first question to be asked, from where I sit, is how it was that a young man felt no compunction about coming at the police with a knife? No fear. This is the loss of deterrence.

And then, how it is that the local Israeli Arabs saw rioting as an appropriate response to what happened? Particularly considering the fact that Hamdan was involved with a stun grenade and then came at the police with a knife.

Netanyahu responded firmly to this situation, saying that we are a nation of law, and that the behavior of the mob cannot be permitted. Some 16 rioters were arrested.

The police will investigate the situation, and, if it is found that there was a lack of professional judgment exhibited by the police, there will be repercussions (as indeed there should be).

But those questions underlying this situation still must be addressed.

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I have certainly written about this before, but feel the need to do so again here: The failure of the international community to vehemently criticize the overt incitement by Abbas and his cronies or the behavior of the Palestinian Arabs who have chosen again and again to resort to obscene violence. Either there is total silence, or there is a politically correct attempt to be even-handed that, in fact, is a grave injustice to Israel.

We have, for example, UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, who expressed great concern about “the violence” (perpetrators not identified). Following the tried and true formula for statements of moral equivalence, he called on all sides to show restraint so as to “avoid further exacerbating an already tense environment.” I will refrain from further comment here.

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I really disliked Catherine Ashton, EU foreign affairs chief. But I have a sneaking suspicion that I may begin to miss her, now that she has been replaced by Federica Mogherini of Italy.

Credit: lifeinitaly
At the end of last week, after visiting Gaza, she pronounced, “We need a Palestinian state – that is the ultimate goal and this is the position of all of the European Union. It is not only the people of Gaza that can’t afford having a forth war, all the world cannot afford it.“

Unfortunately, she neglected to address a few small matters, such as why she thinks a Palestinian state will prevent another war in Gaza (this is the major delusion), or why the situation in Gaza is so important to the world in the face of what’s happening in Syria, Iraq, etc. etc. It’s the same old over-emphasis on Palestinian Arabs to the neglect of much more serious problems in the world. And, of course, if the world “needs” a Palestinian state, then surely she expects us to bite the bullet and make the concessions that will make such a state possible. Watch for what comes next.

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On Tuesday night, a mosque in al-Mugayir, an Arab village near Ramallah, was set on fire. The villagers promptly blamed Jews living in the area, which is in Samaria (the Shomron). “Only settlers would do this,” said the mayor.

According to one police source, however, this arson had none of the earmarks of attacks by Jewish extremists – no graffiti, for example. Unfortunately, the police could not complete their investigation because they were not allowed by village residents to come in and do so.

Head of the Shomron Regional Council Gershon Mesika roundly condemned the arson, but said, thus far “no Jew has ever been caught setting fire to a mosque.”

This story is highly instructive on several counts. I cannot state with any certainty what happened in this instance, but I can tell you that there have been other instances in which Arabs were shown to have damaged their own property and then blamed the Jews. The fact that the police were not allow to conduct a proper investigation does give pause.

Of course, what is most likely to make headlines is the accusation by villagers that Jews set their mosque on fire.

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Kerry has come to the area to help calm down matters. Oh joy. He met with Abbas and King Abdullah, and just now had completed a meeting with Netanyahu and the king. I will save comment on this for my next posting, after Shabbat – if indeed what transpired is worthy of comment.

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I have been asked by a reader to end my posting with something good. I used to do this, and then of late have been overwhelmed by the not-good news. And so here I present something to make my readers smile:

Yehuda Glick is doing very well. So well, that he was able to pose for his first picture in the hospital, with his wife, Yafi:

President Obama has doubled down on his latest lie—that last week’s elections were not a repudiation of his policies and governance. The pollsters and the media missed the mark as well, by a long shot. The election was a clear repudiation of an out-of-control, dishonest, incompetent, and corrupt administration. While the voters may not love Republicans, a majority of them recognized that they are the only hope of stopping the Obama agenda, which is disastrous for this country on many levels.

Even when Obama said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” last Sunday that “The buck stops here,” meaning he accepted some responsibility, he added that it was really about his messaging and skills of persuasion, not his policies, his incompetence, or his radical agenda. He also said that the meaning of the election was that the American people just want Washington to work, and that he is committed to that.

His loyalists in the media took a bit of a different position. The view of MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski and Chuck Todd, along with numerous other analysts, was that the real problem was the Democrats’ rejection of President Obama in the period leading up to the election. Very few incumbent Democrats wanted anything to do with Obama, but the belief of those journalists and analysts, taking their cue from the White House spin machine, was that if the candidates would have only embraced the President and his great “success” with the economy, they would have done much better. But those who did embrace him, for the most part, lost anyway. Some were shockers, such as the governor’s races in the very blue states of Maryland, Illinois and Massachusetts.

Remember, Obama said that while he wasn’t “on the ballot this fall…make no mistake: These policies are on the ballot, every single one of them.” And the voters clearly agreed, either by the way they voted, or their decision to stay home.

The big question following the 2014 November elections is, what will both sides do now? For the GOP, the dilemma is said to be that they need to show that they can govern, and not just obstruct and say no. Without women, blacks and Latinos, we are told, the GOP can’t win another presidential election. So they must move to the left. However, a Gallup poll taken after the election shows that by a 53% to 36% margin, Americans “want GOP legislators in Congress to have more influence over the country’s direction than Obama during the next year.” The voters are saying to the GOP, show us what you’ve got.

At the state level, the Republican wave was even more dominant. According to the website, Vox, “Republicans now control state government outright in at least 24 states, one more than they did before the election. They control at least 66 of 99 state legislative chambers nationwide. And they cut the number of states with total Democratic control from 14 to seven —the lowest number since the Civil War.”

The dilemma for Obama is that he either has to drop the hand grenade of amnesty for millions of illegal immigrants in this country—which by all indications he plans to do—or risk, as Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) said, a “civil war” in the Democrat Party. And if Obama does take that action, he will, in essence, be telling Republicans, “Forget what I said, I have no interest in working with you to pass even compromise versions of your legislation. That is why I worked with Harry Reid (D-NV) to bury some 360 bills you passed in this session of Congress.” The real do-nothing part of Congress was the Reid-led Senate acting on behalf of the Obama White House. And when the results of the election were becoming apparent, leading Democrats blasted President Obama, including Harry Reid’s chief of staff, who did so on the record to The Washington Post.

Obama’s and the Democrats’ problems were the collective weight from the administration’s continued lies about how well the economy is doing; about how well Obamacare is doing; about the handling of the Ebola situation; about Obama’s phony war and phony coalition to defeat and degrade ISIS; about the politics of race; about his desperation to make a deal with Iran; about scandals such as Benghazi, the IRS and the Veterans Administration; and about his shoddy treatment of Israel. It has been compounded even further by the blunt remarks that came to light this week that showed how an MIT economics professor, Jonathan Gruber, who was one of the architects of Obamacare—and paid $400,000 for doing so—unambiguously revealed how the administration counted on what it viewed as “the stupidity of the American voter” to dishonestly push their health care legislation through Congress. Buckle up. We’re in for a hell of a ride.

It’s time to present this week’s statuette of shame, the Golden Weasel!!

Every Tuesday, the Council nominates some of the slimiest, most despicable characters in public life for some deed of evil, cowardice or corruption they’ve performed. Then we vote to single out one particular Weasel for special mention, to whom we award the statuette of shame, our special, 100% plastic Golden Weasel. This week’s nominees were all slime-worthy, but in the end the winner was… the envelope please…

Obamacare Architect Jonathan Gruber!!

The Right Planet: Obamacare architect Jonathan Gruber, who bragged about deceiving the American people in order to get Obamacare passed. According to Mr. Gruber, Americans are just too stupid to know what’s good for them. Fortunately, for us, we have “experts” like Mr. Gruber to help save us from ourselves. That’s why the ends justifies the means, according to Mr. Gruber, et al. I guess the “most transparent administration in history” ain’t so transparent after all. Huh. Imagine that. Go figure. ALL HAIL THE EXPERT!

The Independent Sentinel: My choice for Weasel of the Week for lying about Obamacare and counting on a lack of transparency and the stupidity of the American people to pass it.

“This bill was written in a tortured way to make sure CBO did not score the mandate as taxes. If CBO scored the mandate as taxes, the bill dies. Okay, so it’s written to do that. In terms of risk rated subsidies, if you had a law which said that healthy people are going to pay in – you made explicit healthy people pay in and sick people get money, it would not have passed… Lack of transparency is a huge political advantage. And basically, call it the stupidity of the American voter or whatever, but basically that was really really critical for the thing to pass… Look, I wish Mark was right that we could make it all transparent, but I’d rather have this law than not.”

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You have to absolutely love this week’s Weasel.

Gruber and his prog fascist chums put together a bill that was deliberately designed to be deceptive, murky and hard to understand… not that Congress was actually given time to read this monstrosity anyway. Then he did a little chest thumping about it with some of his lefty pals in academia and was outed when a video surfaced and went viral.

Not for causing millions of people to lose their healthcare, see the premiums and co-pays skyrocket to where they effectively had no coverage or are paying a lot more for a lot less coverage.

Not for causing the loss of thousands of jobs or the conversion of full time jobs into part time jobs with part time income.

Not for the huge loss of capital and man hours by businesses and individuals.

No, he apologized for bragging about it and getting caught.

Ah well, as Barack Obama would say, you won. So come up to the stage, Dr. Gruber.

Whatever do you mean, sir? No, of course we don’t actually have a specific Golden Weasel for you. You should have read the 1,500 page memorandum we sent you along with your invitation, where in the footnotes to section 3a, paragraph 2, subsection c, while it says a Golden Weasel will be awarded, it certainly doesn’t specify that it would be awarded here, on this specific date or to you, now does it?

Oh, now no need to get so upset. You know, we had to phrase it in an opaque, non-transparent fashion to get you to come tonight. Things like this always work better that way politically and if you spent money for transport, meals and a hotel thinking you were going to get a Golden Weasel here tonight, well, I guess you’re simply mistaken. Anyway, it’s all for the Greater Good and of course you can’t blame us if it didn’t go the way you assumed it would based on what we wrote. Although I have to admit, to paraphrase someone whose name I can’t quite recall just now, without the stupidity of some of our nominees, no Golden Weasels would ever be passed out. Or something like that.

Is that the kind of language they taught you to use at MIT, Dr. Gruber?

Well, there it is!

Check back next Tuesday to see who next week’s nominees for Weasel of the Week are!

Make sure to tune in every Monday for the Watcher’s Forum and remember, every Wednesday, the Council has its weekly contest with the members nominating two posts each, one written by themselves and one written by someone from outside the group for consideration by the whole Council. The votes are cast by the Council and the results are posted on Friday morning.

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